US adds Boko Haram leaders to terrorist list

Washington designates three leaders of the African armed group as “terrorists” in bid to halt violence in Nigeria.

Boko
Abubakar Shekau is said to be the leader of Nigeria's Boko Haram armed group [AFP]

The United States designated three leaders of Nigeria’s Boko Haram armed group as “terrorists” in a bid to stem the ongoing violence in Nigeria.

The three named by the US State Department on Thursday were Abubakar Shekau, widely believed to lead Boko Haram’s main cell, Abubakar Adam Kambar and Khalid al-Barnawi.

The US stopped short of putting the group as a whole on its terror list.

“In the last 18 months, Boko Haram or associated fighters have killed more than 1,000 people,” the state department said in a statement, adding that Shekau was the most visible of the group’s leaders.

The two other men were accused of close links to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, which has been designated as a “foreign terrorist organisation” by Washington.

“Under Shekau’s leadership, Boko Haram has claimed responsibility for numerous attacks in northern Nigeria, its primary area of operation,” the statement said, adding that most of the victims were “overwhelmingly civilian”.

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Al Jazeera’s Rosalind Jordan, reporting from Washington, said the move will block possible assets of the men in the US.

“It also prohibits US persons from engaging in transactions with or for the benefit of these individuals,” our correspondent said.

Boko Haram, which means “Western education is sin” in the Hausa language spoken in northern Nigeria, is believed to have a number of factions with differing aims, including some with political links and an Islamist cell.

Initially, the group said it was fighting for the creation of an Islamic state in the north of Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest oil producer.

But a range of demands by different people have since been issued, including the release of its members from prison.

Boko Haram launched an uprising in 2009, leading to nearly a week of fighting that ended with a military assault that left some 800 people dead.

The group went dormant for more than a year before reemerging in 2010 with a series of assassinations. Bomb blasts, including suicide attacks, have since become frequent and increasingly deadly.

2009 uprising

This week, Boko Haram claimed responsibility for suicide attacks on churches in Kaduna state on Sunday that left at least 16 people dead. They also sparked reprisals by Christian mobs against mosques and Muslims that killed
dozens.

Frustration over the government’s inability to stop attacks by the group has triggered warnings that more residents could take the law into their own hands.

Shekau was once thought to have been killed, but re-emerged in January to lead the group from the shadows.

He appeared on the internet at the time, threatening more attacks and saying Boko Haram was responsible for the January 20 violence that killed 185 people in Kano.

He was seen as the second-in-command of Boko Haram during a 2009 uprising.

The leader at the time, Mohammed Yusuf, was captured by soldiers and handed over to police. Yusuf was later killed when police claimed he was trying to escape, though rights groups have called it a summary execution.

Born in a farming village also called Shekau in northeastern Yobe state, Shekau studied theology under local clerics in the Mafoni area of Maiduguri and enrolled in a government-run school for Islamic studies.

He is often shown in photos wearing a keffiyeh and seated next to an AK-47 assault rifle.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies